12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Read!, 27 Sep 2010
By arizonareader "desertgrandma" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Darkening of Deacon (Tree of Life) (Kindle Edition)
I'd like to start this review by stating I'm not particularly a Fantasy genre fan, and really didn't expect to enjoy this book as much as I did. Ha! Fooled me.
Elita Faith Daniels has a definite way with words. The first sentence 'hooked' me, and her flowing sentences made me want to keep reading. Its rare in today's novels to
get such enjoyment just from the way wording is used.
""Set in a mythical country, there are elves, and humans, and 'mage'.....those with mystical powers.
The story centers around young Deacon, and his struggle to come to terms with his part human, part mage heritage, while fighting his own internal demons. The authors descriptive prose brought the characters and surroundings to life, and I found myself rooting for, sympathizing with, and wanting to throttle Deacon at different times.
There are highs, and there are lows, and I felt each one. If there is one downside......its the ending. Elita!! How can you leave me hanging like this??? There had best be a part II and soon.
I read the e-book version, which was very well formatted, with clickable TOC.
I have very few "shelf worthy" books..but this is one I turned around and ordered in paper form.
**Disclaimer. This is a near duplicate post of a review I posted on LibraryThing.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
AUTHORity Featurette for Ricochet Reviews :), 2 Nov 2011
By Miranda Wheeler "Ricochet Reviews" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Darkening of Deacon (Tree of Life) (Kindle Edition)
View the Original Review here: [...]
Tree of Life is unlike anything I've ever read. Ever.
Firstly, this cover is absolutely beautiful. Both versions - the print edition is gorgeous too, but the e-book cover is stunning! I'm pretty sure the same artist that did Fate Fixed by Bonnie Erina Wheeler (another gorgeous cover!) had something to do with it. In short, the piece is beautiful.
Speaking of beautiful pieces... wow.
I restate: Tree of Life is unlike anything I've ever read.
Ever.
I've only read one other set of works with elves (that I can recall, anyhow) - and that is J.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. In many ways, I can see very direct similiarities between the two - but at once, they are so different, sometimes the only comparisions to be drawn are in the nature of the beings themselves. Which, I assure you, is a very, very good thing.
In this ethereal realm, of a sort, there is this sacred innocence and brutality that facinated me. It ways, it refrences - or at least reflects - certain direct themes of a utopian (or in areas, maybe dystopian) society. There is also strong themes, objects, and scenery that are so historic, as well. It takes on an almost medieval setting - which I personally love. There's also this celestially paranormal other-realm thing going on, and it's simply and complexly amazing.
The elves themselves play on the classical thoughts associated with elves. Ethereal. Beautiful. A interpretation of perfect as concieved by the human mind. So perfect, in fact, that the few imperfections that they did have - they recognize, and look to divine beings (for the most part undefined in the book) for there short-fallings. Nature is sacred, love is sacred, life is sacred. They have a philosophy and a religion, but it seems that the purpose and detication is in their very nature. It's not morbid or chilling - much unlike Magenta's priestess, death-worshiping, temple-across-the-creepy-lake roots.
Elita Daniels fleshes out some really facinating concepts.
There's a nature-over-nurture thing going on: what would imperfection (if only enforced genetically) raised in a realm of perfection feel? What would he think? What would tarnish him? What would stregthen him? How is he alike, different? From the elves and his own kind? I love how in his "point of view" (despite being third-person), when he is amongst the elves, he painfully sees himself as hot tempered, "below the perfect" imperfection. When he's amongst humans, he is viewed as an elite creature: an "other" that is above them.
I also loved that because a portion of the book skipped through the eyes of his (Deacon's) mother (Daenara), there is another way to look at it, which was experimented with her take. Their perfection was soothing, awe-inspiring, well-loved and appriciated rather than despised.
I loved the repercussions of being caged and isolated - whether it was Cedrik and Derek in the Imperial, Magenta in the temple, or Deacon in the Elven realm. Even socially. Thinking on terms of, how do they act outside of the cage?, -inside it?, how are they different than those in other isolations?, how are they prepared or unprepared for other parts of the world? have depth beyond the expected.
I loved the push-and-pull. The love between Eomus and Daenara, who were sweet until the end. In the begining of Deacon and Magenta - where it went from curiosity, to infatuation, to sweetness. From that sweetness, it became bittersweet, torturous and passionate, and at times tragic and masochistic.
I loved how there were aspects of common society that were warped for the uses of this other-worldly place. I've never read anything that captures human behaviors and ways so perfectly and realistically - expecially in the paranormal genre.
I loved the unequality and sameness that there was between Deacon and Magenta - even Eumus and Daenara. With the latter, it was the common affectionate, wise, old souls and uncommon Riven human versus elf. With the first, both seemed reserved and unfeeling, both had been subject to pain, and isolated. Both were fervent, passionate, lost in their own morbidities at time, rebelling against influences of their isolation, and bitter from the the world of which they came. But in so many other ways, they were so different - Deacon had traveled, he had been under an ethereal influence (despite the fact that it embittered him), he had a loving mother, and he had been betrayed and saved by his father. Magenta had been locked into the temple, forced into servitude, without a mother or true parents, without love and touch, forced under influences religiously and denying feminitiy through completely feminine influences.
I sincerely believe that readers who love conceptual thought will be enthralled with this. I also believe that readers who don't overtly enjoy abstract themes will be satisfied with the amazing plot and characterization - though I enjoy that kind of thing, I think I would unbothered by them if I didn't. These concepts should not interfere with the overall enjoyment of the book if you want things figured out for you. With that said, this is a long book. It's also a "heavy" read. There is prose, there is advanced vocabulary, there is beautiful but lengthy description.
It is a abomitable shame to not appreciate this work for all that it is worth. To appreciate it correctly - you need to shut everything off, abolish distraction and make yourself comfortable. It won't be the same experiance if you have to put this book down for any reason - and once you are reading it, you won't want to anyway.
Never in my life have I read a work that is so visual. Tree of Life will provide you with as much of a movie as a screen can. These details were beautiful - the writing itself is beautiful. It was amongst the most moving of the books - and the reader felt grief, love, passionate, hatred - everything. The writing had a way of satisfying and ripping the satiety away - a constant tug that made you want to read more. The ending leaves the reader craving - in hunger and thirst - for the sequel, and I'm eagerly going to be following this series of works.
And yet again, I restate: Tree of Life is unlike anything I've read. Ever.
The two most important things I constantly return to when deciding whether or not I am in love with a book are found in these pages: one, I fall into it, and two, it inspires me. I fell into this novel, and it inspired me to write, to re-read Lord of the Rings, to think on broader scales, to not just think outside of the box, but burn it.
This book is something that I would and will re-read over and over again. Something tells me the experience is going to be different every time.
If you love Lord of the Rings by J.R. Tolkien, The House of Night by P.C. & Kristen Cast, the Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini, and The Blue Bloods Series by Melissa De La Cruz, you will find Tree of Life somewhere in between and far beyond.
If you hate them, you might just love this too - it is extremely difficult to compare because it's just so different. The only common ground here is that you need to like longer reads, heavier reads, more interesting and more twisting reads. You need like, love, and want something more.
Highly Recommended.
Nah, that doesn't really cover it. Go, get, now.
You have been commanded by the AUTHORity :)
(NOTE: the AUTHORity is the blog feature that this review was part of. This is a review available on Ricochet Reviews.)